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  1. Vor 3 Tagen · American music is heard around the world. Since the beginning of the 20th century, some forms of American popular music have gained a near global audience. [1] Native Americans were the earliest inhabitants of the land that is today known as the United States and played its first music.

  2. 23. Mai 2024 · The "Great American Songbook" is the canon of the most important and influential American popular songs and jazz standards from the early 20th century that have stood the test of time in their life and legacy.

  3. Vor 2 Tagen · Jazz Origins. The history of jazz music is deeply linked to and embedded with the history of New Orleans. As ragtime and the blues began to circulate, New Orleans incubated music that would come to be called jazz, and the unique social construction of the city provided a cadre of musicians as well as an audience to support and sustain a particular form of musical expression.

  4. 23. Mai 2024 · In episode 3, media critic Wesley Morris explores the Black roots of American popular music from the mid-19th century to the late 20th century, tracing the ways that musical expressions of Blackness became "the sound of complete artistic freedom"-- and the ways that those same expressions have been appropriated for White entertainment, from the ...

  5. 8. Mai 2024 · Music history of the United States. Colonial era – to the Civil War – During the Civil War – Late 19th century – Early 20th century40s and 50s60s and 70s – 80s to the present. This is a timeline of music in the United States from 1950 to 1969 .

  6. 13. Mai 2024 · Michael Broyles believes three decades in American History profoundly changed American Music. The three key decades are the 1840s, the 1920s, and the 1950s. I was most inthralled by Boyles’s presentation of the 1950s (except he cheats a little by making references to musical happenings in the 1940s).

  7. 10. Mai 2024 · country music, style of American popular music that originated in rural areas of the South and West in the early 20th century. The term country and western music (later shortened to country music) was adopted by the recording industry in 1949 to replace the derogatory label hillbilly music.